Friday, October 5, 2012


BIG BROTHER E.U.'s HYPOCRASY... 
SOCIAL MEDIA PLAYS IMPORTANT ROLE IN ARAB WORLD - ASHTON

She said that every day hundreds of hours of video clips from Syria are uploaded on You Tube making sure that human rights violations there do not go unnoticed, despite the attempts of the regime to seal off the country.
[ED NOTES:YES AND THANK GOD FOR THSOE OPPOSITION CLIPS WICH EXPOSE THE OPPOSITION AND REBEL FIGTHERS THEMSELVES..LOVE UGARIT VIDEOS AND SOURIA2001(AMMAR ABDULHAMMID)..THEY HAVE HELPED US SHOW HOW THEY ARE ENGAGED IN WAR CRIMES,DOCTORING VIDEOS,STAGING FAKE DEATHS,USING FAKE BLOOD,AND USING BEHEADING VIDEOS FROM MEXICAN CARTELS..AND MUCH MORE..THANKS INDEED. HERE IS A LONG LIST OF THESE YOUTUBE VIDEOS BY OPPOSITION EXPOSING THEMSELVES (LIST) (UPDATED YESTERDAYTHESYRIACONSPIRACYARCHIVES NOW AS FAR AS ASHTON AND E.U. ON SOCIAL MEDIA IN HER OWN NECK OF THE WOODS..SEE.. SPECIAL STATEWATCH REPORT: The Shape of Things to Come - the EU Future Group (Version.1.3) by Tony Bunyan: 67,134 copies downloaded. The report calls for a “meaningful and wide-ranging debate” before it is “too late” for privacy and civil liberties. The proposals set out by the shadowy "Future Group" set up by the Council of the European Union include a range of highly controversial measures including new technologies of surveillance, enhanced cooperation with the United States and harnessing the "digital tsunami". In the words of the EU Council presidency: "Every object the individual uses, every transaction they make and almost everywhere they go will create a detailed digital record. This will generate a wealth of information for public security organisations, and create huge opportunities for more effective and productive public security efforts." This major new report The Shape of Things to come (60 pages) examines the proposals of the Future Group and their effect on civil liberties. It shows how European governments and EU policy-makers are pursuing unfettered powers to access and gather masses of personal data on the everyday life of everyone – on the grounds that we can all be safe and secure from perceived “threats”. The Statewatch report calls for a “meaningful and wide-ranging debate” before it is “too late” for privacy and civil liberties. See also ongoing: Statewatch Observatory: The Stockhom Programme

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